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American Studies

Many courses offered through Hampshire’s School of Humanities, Arts, and Cultural Studies and School of Social Sciences encourage interdisciplinary approaches to the study of American history, politics, literature, and culture.

Students in American Studies engage in an interdisciplinary approach to American literature and culture. Several core seminars on models, methods, and materials for interdisciplinary study, plus courses from other relevant disciplines, provide the groundwork for students to pursue theoretically informed, integrative research into their special interests.

Student Project Titles
Austin Highway: Twilight of an American Main Street
Histories of Little Compton, Rhode Island
Nazis and Cowboys: A Comparison of Lebensraum and Manifest Destiny Ideologies
Buried Sunshine: Gender, Power, and Silence in the West Virginia Mine Wars
The Trotters of Boston: Fighting Jim Crow from “Freedom’s Birthplace”
On 23rd Street: A Psychological Portrait of a Chinese American Family from Brooklyn
Musical Communities and Gentrification in Washington, D.C.

Featured Faculty Profiles

Susan Tracy
Professor of American Studies

Wilson Valentin-Escobar
Assistant Professor of Sociology and American Studies

Rebecca Miller
Assistant Professor of Music of the Americas

Christopher Tinson
Assistant Professor of African American Studies

Sample First-Year Course
Reimagining American Literature and Identity
This class is an introduction to and expands conventional understandings of twentieth-century American literature. It focuses on representations of diverse American experiences. How would typical approaches to American literature change when we incorporate literature written by women, immigrants, and persons of color? How would we consider racial, national, gendered, and classed identities as part of American literature?

We will begin with short stories by Flannery O'Connor, Toni Morrison, Julia Alvarez, and Philip Roth that address these questions. Then we will read novels written by American immigrant and exile writers, such as Jamaica Kincaid, Jhumpa Lahiri, Manuel Puig, and Edwidge Danticat as well as mainstream Anglo- and African-American writers, such as John Updike and Colson Whitehead, to interrogate how these voices engage questions of nation, exile, home & belonging. This course investigates and recasts what is American Literature. It is also writing intensive and includes writing workshops.

Sample Courses at Hampshire
American Literary Landscapes
American Strings: Old Time & Bluegrass
American Voices, American Lives
Border Matters: Mexico
& the United States
The Contested American Countryside
Directing Contemporary American Drama
Ecology of New England Old Growth
Forests
Introduction to American Studies
The “Good War:” Interrogating the History
of the Homefront During WWII
Mapping Jewish-American Generations
Media in a Time of War: WWII & U.S.
Popular Culture
One Nation Indivisible: Federal Indian Law,
Tribal Sovereignty & Individual Rights


The Politics of the Second World War
Southern History and Literature
Southern Writers: A Sense of Place
This Land is Your Land: Land & Property
in America
U.S. Labor History
U.S. Literature Between the Wars
U.S. Literature Since 1960
Women’s Bodies, Women’s Lives: Biocultural
Dialogues of Women’s Health in America

Through the Consortium
The American Dream (AC)
Asian Pacific American Studies (AC)
Globalization and Culture in the U.S. (SC)
Methods in American Studies (SC)
Seminar in American Orientalisms (MHC)

Facilities and Resources
The Five College Center for Crossroads in the Study of the Americas (CISA) is dedicated to new teaching and scholarship on the Americas. Instead of adopting a North-South approach, CISA has developed a triangular model for its work, where the three sides are formed by the Old World (Africa, Asia, Europe), the polities of the New World, and the indigenous peoples of the Americas.

This conception of the Americas as a crossroads seeks to promote an awareness of the historical and material inter-relationality of citizenship, migration, diaspora, and nationhood. In addition to a series of public events, CISA hosts a seminar series open to all Five College faculty. CISA also sponsors an annual student symposium with a comparatist focus, held each spring, which gathers students from the Five College region together in order to share their work and ideas in a public forum.

The Five College Asian/Pacific/American Studies Certificate Program enables students to pursue concentrated study of the experiences of Asians and Pacific Islanders in the Americas. Through courses chosen in consultation with their campus program advisers, students can learn to appreciate Asian/Pacific/American (A/P/A) cultural and artistic expressions, understand and critique the racial formation of Asian/Pacific/Americans, and investigate how international conflicts, global economic systems, and ongoing migration affect A/P/A communities and individuals and their intersections with others.

Drawing upon diverse faculty, archival, and community-based resources, the Five College program in Asian/Pacific/American Studies encourages students not only to develop knowledge of the past experiences of Asian/Pacific/Americans, but also to act with responsible awareness of their present material conditions.

The U.S. Southwest and Mexico Program, housed by the Hampshire College School of Natural Science, provides support and opportunities for students and others to learn about and carry out research in the Greater Southwest, an area encompassing the American Southwest and Mexico. This distinctive program directs and supports interdisciplinary research done largely in collaboration with partnership organizations on both sides of the border. Hampshire College is committed to engaging in the international debate concerning migration and displacement of people, and the transnational implications and consequences of living within national and political borders.

In a departure from “area studies,” this program seeks to examine boundaries and borders using the Greater Southwest as a starting point and to provide a productive arena where this can take place. This program facilitates active engagement of students with their education by “moving the classroom” to locations in the Southwest and in Mexico where educational opportunities in this area of study are exponentially expanded.

 

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